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Thursday, 16 March 2017

Lion: A Long Way Home

Lion: A Long Way Home by Saroo Brierley (Penguin Books) PB RRP $16.99
ISBN 9780143784760

Reviewed by Dianne Bates

By the time this review appears
here in the Buzz Words’ blog, the story told in this book for readers aged 9 to
12 years, will have been seen by thousands of Australians in cinemas where it
has screened as a major motion picture.

At the age of five, Saroo
Brierley became lost on a train in India. Unable to escape the carriage he
travelled in alone, he spent many hours until he arrived in a foreign city
where he had to survive on his wits. After numerous adventures he was taken to
an orphanage in Calcutta from which he was adopted by the Brierly family in
Tasmania Australia. Despite being happy in his new home, Saroo kept memories of
his mother, sister and two brothers but he could never remember the name of his
home town. He spent hours staring at a map of India in his room and when he was
an adult, working in his adoptive father’s business and with an Australian
girl-friend, he began to pore over satellite images on Google Earth seeking out
landmarks he remembered.

By looking at train tracks
leading into Calcutta, Saroo was able to restrict his search zone to ‘only’
962,300 square kilometres – over a quarter on India’s landmass, in which lived
345 million people. How on earth could he be expected to rely on his memory at
the age of five and yet find four family members nearly 25 years later? The
incredible thing is that Saroo succeeded by eventually being able to locate
childhood sights of an overpass, a bridge over a river and a train station!

This is a fascinating book
because Saroo’s life story is fascinating – and certainly inspirational,
showing readers how it is possible to achieve success through relentless
perseverance. Saroo is reunited with his mother, brother and sister. He learns
that the night that he disappeared, so too did his teenage brother Guddu (who
he was to find out had been killed). On seeing him, his Indian mother called
out ‘Sheru’ – even his first name was mispronounced differently!

This is a simply told story of
winning against immeasurable odds and is sure to be enjoyed immensely by keen
readers.